See more photos…
Rancho San Antonio Bike Trail Guide, 8/22/21 by Ronald Horii
The purpose of this album is to document the bike trail route in Rancho San Antonio County Park. This is at the request of the County Parks Department. It shows the signs, gates, amenities, and sights along the trail. Rancho San Antonio is a very popular park in the hills south of Cupertino and Los Altos. It is accessible from Cristo Rey Drive. The park consists of 165-acre Rancho San Antonio County Park and adjoining 3988-acre Rancho San Antonio Preserve. The Mid-Peninsula Regional Open Space District manages both. The County Park part contains the parking lots, restrooms, and picnic tables. The Mid-Pen part has most of the trails, which go all the way to 2812-foot Black Mountain. There are 24 miles of trails total. Bikes are allowed on the paved trails only. The route shown here is part of the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail, which roughly follows the route of the Anza Expedition of 1775-1776. That expedition brought settlers from New Spain (Mexico) to San Francisco in Alta California.
Park information: https://www.sccgov.org/sites/parks/parkfinder/Pages/RanchoSanAntonio.aspx
Park map: https://www.openspace.org/sites/default/files/map_RSA.pdf
Anza Trail maps: https://www.nps.gov/juba/planyourvisit/maps.htm
The purpose of this album is to document the bike trail route in Rancho San Antonio County Park. This is at the request of the County Parks Department. It shows the signs, gates, amenities, and sights along the trail. Rancho San Antonio is a very popular park in the hills south of Cupertino and Los Altos. It is accessible from Cristo Rey Drive. The park consists of 165-acre Rancho San Antonio County Park and adjoining 3988-acre Rancho San Antonio Preserve. The Mid-Peninsula Regional Open Space District manages both. The County Park part contains the parking lots, restrooms, and picnic tables. The Mid-Pen part has most of the trails, which go all the way to 2812-foot Black Mountain. There are 24 miles of trails total. Bikes are allowed on the paved trails only. The route shown here is part of the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail, which roughly follows the route of the Anza Expedition of 1775-1776. That expedition brought settlers from New Spain (Mexico) to San Francisco in Alta California.
Park information: https://www.sccgov.org/sites/parks/parkfinder/Pages/RanchoSanAntonio.aspx
Park map: https://www.openspace.org/sites/default/files/map_RSA.pdf
Anza Trail maps: https://www.nps.gov/juba/planyourvisit/maps.htm